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November 3, 2010
The Paideia School
Bible 10
Hermeneutics
Biblical Principles
1. God speaks propositional truth to man through the Bible. The Bible is inspired by the Holy
Spirit, is inerrant in all that it affirms, and is the Christian’s infallible guide to belief and
behavior.
2. Since God has used men to speak His message to mankind, there is legitimacy to the Bible-
teaching ministry, including hermeneutics, exegesis, and apologetics, among believers.
3. Scripture can have only one “true” meaning because of the unity of the mind of God and the
corresponding nature of truth. A passage can have only one correct interpretation, yet may
have several applications to various persons’ lives.
4. The Scriptures themselves acknowledge that they contain “mysteries” and passages that are
difficult to understand.
5. God intends that study of, and meditation on, the Scriptures should help students to grow and
develop their personalities in wholeness.
Department Goals
1. Gain a working knowledge of the Bible, thus attaining fluency with Biblical principles and
precepts, in order to forge a Biblical worldview that will form the foundation for all life
experiences and endeavors.
2. Spend the majority of class and study time devoted to the subject of the Bible primarily in the
Biblical text itself, with scholarly support from reference works.
3. Train in sound principles of hermeneutics, rightly dividing the Word of Truth.
4. Maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace by adhering to The Paideia School’s
Statement of Faith and to its Secondary Doctrine Policy. We do not advocate denominational
distinctives, yet allow doctrinal discussion and debate for the benefits of mutual
understanding and improving rhetorical skill.
5. Integrate knowledge and skills from other disciplines and encourage the application of
Biblical truth as the proper framework for discerning truth and error in other subjects.
6. Teach the Bible with a blend and balance of academic rigor and pastoral concern. We
develop virtuous scholars who study the Word and submit to it.
7. Engage/Present key themes and concepts of the course in cogent/elegant/persuasive verbal
and written form, based on original research and analysis/reflection.
Course Goals
Students will:
1. Identify key issues and principles of Biblical hermeneutics.
2. Identify major features of geography and topography of Biblical lands as the setting Biblical
history.
3. Describe the interaction of God’s people with their surrounding cultures politically,
economically, and socially.
4. Compare and contrast the covenant religions of Judaism and Christianity with those of the
surrounding cultures.
5. Examine major genres and motifs of the literature of surrounding cultures and their
appearance in Biblical writings.
6. Become acquainted with research materials and resources that aid in Biblical interpretation.
November 3, 2010
Course Objectives
First Quarter
Introduction
To define hermeneutics and appreciate its importance.
To comprehend the challenges the modern interpreter faces in biblical
interpretation.
To understand the necessary spiritual qualifications of the interpreter and the role
of the Holy Spirit in interpretation.
To apprehend the necessity of textual criticism and to work with textual notes that
bear upon interpretation of a passage.
To use various Bible translations and appreciate the differences among translation
philosophies.
Analysis of Various Methods of Interpretation
To evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of various historical methods of
interpretation.
To evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of various contemporary methods of
interpretation.
Second Quarter
Grammatical-Historical-Literary Method of Biblical Interpretation
To master the fundamentals of the grammatical-historical-literary method of Bible
interpretation.
The Christian pre-understanding.
Observation.
Interpretation.
Application.
To comprehend the basic levels of meaning in interpretation.
To discover and delineate the literary context of a passage.
To research the historical and cultural background of a passage.
To perform word studies.
To analyze grammatical relationships in a passage.
Third Quarter
Interpreting Bible Genres
To identify the basic types of literary genre within the Bible.
To interpret basic Biblical literary genres:
Narrative/story.
Poetry and Psalms.
Interpreting Specific Genres
To interpret specific Biblical literary genres:
Old Testament narrative.
Old Testament law.
November 3, 2010
Old Testament wisdom.
Fourth Quarter
Continue:
Embedded genres (proverbs, fables, riddles, songs, lists).
The Gospels.
Parables.
New Testament narrative.
New Testament epistles.
Visionary literature.
Old Testament prophecy.
Satire.
Revelation.
Bible Study Tools
To become comfortable using the Bible student’s basic toolbox.
Concordances and lexicons.
Bible Dictionaries and encyclopedias.
Commentaries.
Specialized books.
Computer software.
Textbook and Other Required Materials
Libronix Bible study software
2 or 3 inch binder for class notes and handouts
One of the following:
The MacArthur Study Bible.
The NIV Study Bible.
The Spirit of the Reformation Study Bible.
ESV Study Bible (highly recommended)
Literary Study Bible
8/5/2013
The Paideia School
Latin V – 10th Grade
Biblical Principles
1. God has given us the gift of language constructed in a rational and propositional mode
so that we may better understand Him, one another, and the created order.
2. Language is an essential tool in our fulfillment of the Dominion Mandate and the Great
Commission.
3. God has given us language to accumulate, organize, and transmit knowledge gained by
the human race.
4. The providential generation of multiple languages and study of these languages allows
the student a means to view, understand, and transcend cultural differences.
5. Language, learned well and articulated wisely, is of great service to God and man.
Classical Languages and Literature Department Goals
1. Recall grammatical constructions and their uses.
2. Identify vocabulary and English derivatives.
3. Translate simple and complex grammatical constructions.
4. Read primary source documents for comprehension.
5. Interpret and analyze cultural values of Classical Antiquity from primary source
readings.
6. Evaluate the culture of Classical Antiquity according to Biblical standards.
Course Goals
Students will:
1. Master simple and complex grammatical constructions.
2. Continue to build Latin and English vocabulary.
3. Study ancient culture through primary texts.
4. Measure the discipline of Latin and the understanding of ancient cultural
values against Biblical standards.
5. Translate from the Latin Vulgate as a means to increase student
understanding of the Scriptures.
8/5/2013
Course Objectives
First Quarter
Translate selections from Latin New Testament Vulgate:
Matthew 5:1-12
Matthew 7:1-14
Mark 7:1-23
Luke 19:11-27
Review vocabulary, derivatives, and grammar constructions that correspond to
Latin I, II, and III
Review Bible Memory work in Latin and English
Second Quarter
Translate selections from Latin New Testament Vulgate:
John 17:1-14
Acts 9:1-19
Acts 27: 21-44
Acts 28:1-16
Review vocabulary, derivatives, and grammar constructions that correspond to
Latin I, II, and III
Review Bible Memory work in Latin and English
Third Quarter
Translate selections from Latin New Testament Vulgate:
Romans 1:18-32
Romans 3:21-31
Romans 5:1-11
Romans 8:1-17
Review vocabulary, derivatives, and grammar constructions that correspond to
Latin I, II, and III
Review Bible Memory work in Latin and English
Fourth Quarter
Translate selections from Latin New Testament Vulgate:
1 Cor. 1:18-31
1 Cor. 13
2 Cor. 5:1-21
Eph. 2:1-23
Review vocabulary, derivatives, and grammar constructions that correspond to
Latin I, II, and III
8/5/2013
Review Bible Memory work in Latin and English
Teacher Materials
Wheelock, Frederic M. Wheelock’s Latin: Sixth Edition, Revised. Edited by
Richard A. La Fleur, Harper Collins, 2005. ISBN: 0-06-078423-7
Novum Testamentum Vulgate, Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1996. ISBN: 3-438-
05300-4
Student Materials
Novum Testamentum Vulgate, Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1996. ISBN: 3-438-
05300-4
Special Activities
National Latin Exam-Latin III
Gospel Presentation in Latin – Write and Present
June 22, 2018
The Paideia School
English 10
Classical Literature
English Department Goals
1. Examine the worldviews that manifest themselves in language and literature and evaluate
them from a Biblical perspective.
2. Train in the use of grammatical and literary tools to fully engage the great literary art of
Western Civilization.
3. Recognize that grammatical and literary skills provide access to all other academic and
artistic pursuits.
4. Articulate the great ideas through thorough research, careful documentation, and eloquent
analysis, building dialectical and rhetorical skills in an age appropriate manner.
5. Develop creative abilities to the glory of God.
Course Goals
Students will:
1. Read and analyze a variety of Classical literature.
2. Understand the technical and aesthetic aspects of great literature.
3. Think critically about the content, form, and interpretation of literary works.
4. Develop a deeper understanding of truth as they learn to differentiate between vain
philosophies and Scriptural principles in literature.
5. Expand their ability to integrate deeper thought and learned vocabulary into their own
verbal and written communication.
6. Develop a higher view of God through an examination of beauty, form and talent.
Biblical Principles
1. Communication is a reality intrinsic to the triune Godhead and extrinsic to God in
relation to His creation.
2. Language is a divine gift that enables man to think and to communicate clearly,
quickly, and meaningfully.
3. God intends that man's thoughts and communications reflect truth, goodness, and
beauty.
4. Sin's power to distort and pervert the created order extends even to man's thoughts
and communications.
5. The Bible is the intellectual, moral, and spiritual standard for evaluating all other
communication: in content, in motive, and in effect.
June 22, 2018
Course Objectives
First Quarter
As preparation for this year’s literature study, it is highly recommended that the teacher read
pertinent sections of Heroes of the City of Man by Peter Leithart.
Literature: Homer’s Iliad, Great Books Vol. 3 (selections)
• Themes: honor, glory, hubris, anthropomorphic polytheism, Heroic Code
• Optional Literary Devices: invocation of the Muse, in media res, epic characteristics,
Homeric similes, epithets, alter ego/ Achilles and Hector (author’s use of character
parallels and rationale for such)
• History: Mycenaean Age of Greece, Judgment of Paris, Trojan War, Homeric Question,
Map of Ancient Greece and Asia Minor
Writing
• Review thesis statement driven outlines
• Literary Paper (using and quoting primary source studied that quarter)
• Style Skills: As Needed (e.g. word choice, conventions of quoting, concision, cohesion &
coherence, emphasis, sentence variety, topic and conclusion sentences, verb usage,
elegance)
Poetry
• “The Shield of Achilles” by W.H. Auden
• “Ode to a Grecian Urn” by John Keats
Second Quarter
Literature: Homer’s Odyssey, Great Books Vol. 3 (selections)
• Themes: Loyalty, Family, Immortality, Justice, Cunning, Temptation, Maturation
(Telemachus), Role of the Feminine
Writing
• Researching Literary Sources (library and internet)
• Annotated Bibliography (MLA citation of article/book, along with 3-4 sentence synopsis)
• Literary Paper (using primary source studied that quarter)
• Style Skill: As Needed (See first quarter)
Poetry
• “Ulysses” by Alfred Lord Tennyson (memorize last two stanzas)
• “Ithaca” by Constantine Cavafy
Third Quarter
Literature
• Aeschylus’ Agamemnon, Great Books Vol. 4
• Euripides’ Medea, Great Books Vol. 4
June 22, 2018
• Sophocles’ Antigone OR Oedipus Rex Great Books Vol. 4 (See Summer Reading)
• Themes: Fate, Hubris, Sin, Death, “Deus ex machina”
• Basics of Greek Theater (amphitheatre, chorus, costumes)
• Aristotle’s Views of Tragedy, from Poetics
• Distinctions between Aeschylian, Sophoclean, and Euripidean heroism
Writing
• Poetry Paper or Drama Paper
• Literary Research Paper (1-2 sources)
• Style Skill: As Needed (see first quarter)
Poetry
• “Prometheus” by Lord Byron (memorize)
• Review myths relating to Prometheus in Hamilton’s Mythology
Fourth Quarter
Literature: Aeneid, Great Books Vol. 12 (selections)
• Themes: Duty, Love, Sacrifice, Tradition, Role of the Feminine
• History: Augustus’ empire, Carthage and Dido, Biography of Virgil, and the Pax Romana
• Virgil’s Eclogue IV
Christological interpretation of literature
Writing
• Literary Research Paper (citation from primary source, along with 2-3 scholarly sources)
• Style Skill: As Needed (see first quarter)
Poetry
• “The God Forsakes Antony” by Constantine Cavafy (memorize)
Teacher Resources
Style: Lessons in Clarity and Grace. Williams, Joseph M. ISBN: 978-0205747467
Encyclopedia Britannica’s Great Books of Western Civilization, Vols. 3, 4, and 12.
Heroes of the City of Man. Leithart, Peter. ISBN: 978-1885767554
Oxford Dictionary of Classical Literature.
Student Resources
Encyclopedia Britannica’s Great Books of Western Civilization, Vols. 3, 4, and 12.
Summer Reading
Mythology (I-IV), Hamilton, Edith.
Oedipus Rex OR Antigone Sophocles
Suggested Activities
College Composition CLEP Exam
6/13/2011
The Paideia School
History 10
United States History
Biblical principles
1. God sovereignly superintends all things, including man’s activities and
circumstances throughout history.
2. The Biblical conception of linear time moving from creation through the cross
toward its consummation in Christ’s second coming gives meaning and
urgency to historical events.
3. God judges individuals, cultures, and nations that fall short of His glory, and
only Christ and His gospel can redeem and ennoble them.
4. God judges individuals in eternity according to their faith in Christ, but He
deals with nations in the course of historical events according to their
standards of justice and righteousness.
5. God commands that men learn from the mistakes and accomplishments of
their historical predecessors.
Department Goals
1. Attain a Scriptural understanding of human nature and historical patterns, with particular
attention to sin and its consequences.
2. Understand that history is an examination of the progression and composite of all Divine
activity and human endeavor.
3. Use the discipline of History as a paradigm for the study of the development of other subject
areas.
4. Interact frequently with primary sources, especially those from the canon of Western
Civilization.
5. Articulate thoughts and beliefs regarding historical events by thorough research, careful
documentation, and wise expression.
6. Incorporate Biblical precept and historical example in pursuit of godly citizenship.
Course Goals
Student will:
1. Recall significant dates, people, events, and movements including their geographies from the
time of European exploration of North America to the modern era.
2. Evaluate the significance of important religious, political, economic, philosophical movements
in light of God’s Word from the time of early European exploration to the modern era.
3. Understand the interconnectedness of concurrent events as well as to previous and present
circumstances between the United States and Europe.
4. Understand the development of the United States Government from a colony to a democratic
republic.
5. Read from selected primary and secondary documents, books and publication that represent
significant thinking during the life of the United States.
6/13/2011
First Quarter
Review European Exploration to the New World and Early Spanish Settlement
Review religious, political, and economic motivation and implications of European Exploration
Key Individuals: Christopher Columbus
Early Settlements in the New World 1500-1600s
Jamestown – Religious, Political, Social, and Economics Conditions, Starving Time,
II Thessalonians 3:10, and the House of Burgess
Key Individuals: King James, London Company John Smith, Reverend Thomas Hooker,
Pocahontas, and Algonquian Indians
Primary Sources: The First Charter of Virginia, Excerpts John Smith’s Journal, Benjamin West
Portrait Pocahontas’ Baptism
New England 1600s
Pilgrims/Separatists – Religious Persecution in England, Role of the Church in Political, Social,
Judicial and Economic System of the Colony, and the first Thanksgiving
Key Individuals: King James, William Brewster, William Bradford, and Squanto
Primary Sources: Mayflower Compact and Excerpts from: Of Plymouth Plantation by William
Bradford
Puritan “Great Migration” Massachusetts Bay Colony, Salem Witch Trials, and Harvard and
Yale Universities
Key Individuals: Increase Mather, Cotton Mather, and Jonathan Winthrop
Primary Sources: Excerpts from: Westminster Confession of Faith, Paradise Lost, and The
Satan Deluder Act
Establishment of Original Thirteen Colonies – Charter, Royal, and Proprietary
The First Great Awakening 1700s
Religious, Social and Political Changes
Key Individuals: Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield
Primary Sources: Excerpts from: A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God, and
Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God by Jonathan Edwards
French and Indian War
Territorial Conflict between France, Great Britain, and Iroquois Indians
Key Individual: George Washington
Colonial Independence
Proclamation Act of 1763, Stamp, Sugar, Declaratory, Townshend, and Intolerable Acts, Battles
at: Lexington, Concorde, Boston, Trenton, Princeton, Saratoga, and Yorktown
Colonial Responses: First and Second Continental Congress, Boston Tea Party, and Olive
Branch Petition
Declaration of Independence
Treaty of Paris
Key Individuals: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John and Abigail Adams, Samuel
Adams, Benjamin Franklin, John Hancock, Patrick Henry, King George III, Thomas Paine,
Committee of Five, Richard Lee, John Locke, Baron de Montesquieu, and William Blackstone
Primary Sources: Magna Carter, Common Sense, The Declaration of Independence, Spirit
of the Law, Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death, and Two Treatises of Government
6/13/2011
Second Quarter
The New Republic
Articles of Confederation, Constitutional Convention, Great Compromise, Three-fifths
Compromise, Bill of Rights, Marbury verses Madison
Federalist verses Anti-Federalist – Balance of Power between Central and State Governments
Three Branches of Government
Barbary Wars
Key Individuals: George Washington, John Adams, James Madison, James Monroe, Alexander
Hamilton, and John Quincy Adams
Primary Sources: Excerpts from: Articles of Confederation and Federalist Papers 10, 51, and
84. Constitution, Bill of Rights, Washington’s First Inaugural Address, Farewell Address, and
Washington’s Thanksgiving Proclamation
Westward Expansion and Growth in the Republic
Two Party System, War of 1812, Monroe Doctrine, Trail of Tears, Missouri Compromise,
Specie Circular, Doctrine of Nullification, War with Mexico, Second Great Awakening, Oregon
Territory, Compromise of 1850, Women’s Suffrage at Seneca Falls, and Economic Crisis 1859
Key Individuals: James Madison, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, Alex De Tocqueville,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Susan B. Anthony
Primary Sources: Democracy in America
Sectionalism, States’ Rights, and Slavery
Differences between North and South, Slavery verses Abolition, Lincoln/Douglas Debates,
Dred Scott, Lincoln Elected, Southern State Secession, Civil War, Fort Sumter, Gettysburg,
Sherman’s March to Atlanta, Appomattox, Lincoln’s Assassination,
Key Individuals: Abraham Lincoln, Fredrick Douglas, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Robert E. Lee,
Ulysses S. Grant, William T. Sherman, Stonewall Jackson,
Primary Sources: Excerpts from: Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Lincoln Douglas Debate, House Divided
Speech, and Various Southern State Constitutions, Gettysburg Address and Emancipation
Proclamation.
Third Quarter
Reconstruction
Rebuilding the Union, Johnson Impeachment, Radical Republicans, Freedman’s Bureau,
Elections of first Black Senators, Ku Klux Klan, 10% and 50% Plans, Thirteenth, Fourteenth,
and Fifteenth Amendments, and Plessey verses Ferguson
Key Individuals: Andrew Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant and Dwight L. Moody
Primary Sources: Constitutional Amendments (Thirteen, Fourteen, and Fifteen)
Railroads and the Gilded Age
Westward Expansion, Railroads, Credit Mobilier Scandal, Centennial Exposition, Great
Railroad Strike, The Grange, Populist Party, Sherman Anti-Trust Act, Laissez-Faire Economics,
Development of Labor Unions, Homestead Act, and Indian Wars in the West
Key Individuals: U.S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James, Garfield, and William Jennings
Bryan, George Custer, and Sitting Bull
6/13/2011
Industrial Revolution
Captains of Industry verses Robber Barons, Inventions, Pullman Strike, and Civil Service
Reforms, and Interstate Commerce Act
Key Individuals: Cleveland, Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, Carnegie, J.P. Morgan, and Henry B. Plant
Foreign Relations 1898 through the Early 1900s
Spanish American War: Cuban Rebels, Maine, De Lome Letter, Rough Riders, and San Juan
Hill, and the Buffalo Soldiers, U.S. Expansion, and Panama Canal
Key Individuals: William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt
Primary Sources: Fredrick Remington, Charge Up San Juan Hill
Progressive Era Reforms 1900s
Reforms: Immigration, Education, Housing, Child Labor, Working Conditions, Government
Regulatory Agencies: Food and Drug Administration, National Park Service, Square Deal, and
Prohibition
Key Individuals: Theodore Roosevelt, Jane Addams, and John Dewey
Primary Sources: Roosevelt’s Five Things Which Will Destroy America
World War I 1914-1918
Isolationism, Lusitania Sank, Doughboys, National War Labor Board, Espionage and Sedition
Act, Armistice Day, Wilson’s Fourteen Points, League of Nations and Treaty of Versailles.
Key Individuals: Woodrow Wilson
Fourth Quarter
The Twenties and the Great Depression
Federal Reserve Banking, Red Scare, Emergency Quote Act, National Origins Act, Nineteenth
Amendment, Credit, Leisure Time, Sports, Dust Bowl, Stock Market Crash, Hoovervilles, New
Deal Programs, Scopes Trial, and the Eugenics Movement,
Key Individuals: Hubert Hoover, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, William Jennings Bryan, and
Margret Sanger
World War II
Lend Lease Act, Pearl Harbor, D-Day, Big Three, European Liberation, Victory in Europe,
Manhattan Project, Atomic Bombs, Japanese Internment/Executive Order 9066, and Life on the
Home Front
Key Individuals: Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Douglas
McArthur, and Rosie the Riveter
Primary Sources: FRD’s Pearl Harbor Speech
The Cold War Begins
Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, Soviet Expansion Eastern Europe and Asia, NATO, United
Nations, Berlin Airlift, Korean War, Red Scare, and Hollywood Ten
War in Vietnam: Gulf of Tonkin, Tet Offensive, Draft, and Reactions in U.S.
Bay of Pigs, and Cuban Missile Crisis
Space Race
Key Individuals: Truman, Eisenhower, Joseph McCarthy, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon
6/13/2011
Social Issues of the 1950s - 1970s
Civil Rights: Brown vs. Board of Education, Little Rock Nine, Bus Boycott, Freedom Riders,
March on Washington, Peaceful verses Violent Protests, Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts,
and Affirmative Action
War on Poverty: the Great Society, Changes in the Family Structure, and Government
Programs,
Counter Culture: Hippies, Woodstock, War Protests, Kent State, Environmental Issues
Legalization of Abortion
Watergate
Energy Crisis
Key Individuals: Eisenhower, Martin Luther King, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, and Carter
Foreign Policy 1970s – 1990s
Camp David Accords, Iranian Hostages, Iran-Contra Affair, Panama Canal, STAR WARS, INF
Treaty, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Collapse of Soviet Union, and Operation Desert Storm
Key Individuals: Carter, Reagan, Oliver North, Gorbachev, Bush, and Hussein
Primary Sources: Ronald Reagan Speeches: Evil Empire and Brandenburg Gate
Domestic and Foreign Policy 1980s-Current
Supreme Court Appointments: Sandra Day O’Connor, Clarence Thomas, Clinton Impeached,
September 11th
Attacks, and War on Terrorism
Key Individuals: Reagan, Bush Sr., Clinton, Bush, and Obama
Teacher Resources:
Robert Flood, Men Who Shaped America. Moody Press, Chicago. 1976. ISBN 0-8024-5242-6
William Bennett, America the Last Best Hope Volume I and II. Thomas Nelson, Tennessee. 2006.
ISBN 1-59555-111-5 and 1-59555-057-7
Paul Johnson, A History of the American People. Harper Collins. New York. 1997.
ISBN 0-06-016836-6
Research & Education Association, College Level Examination Program – History of the United States
I Early Colonization to 1877. Research & Education Association. New Jersey. 2008.
ISBN 0-87891-272-X
Research & Education Association, College Level Examination Program – History of the United States
II 1865- Present. Research & Education Association. New Jersey. 2007.
ISBN 0-87891-270-3
Students Resources
Robert Flood, Men Who Shaped America. Moody Press, Chicago. 1976. ISBN 0-8024-5242-6
Early Colonization to 1877. Research & Education Association. New Jersey. 2008.
ISBN 0-87891-272-X
Research & Education Association, College Level Examination Program – History of the United States
II 1865- Present. Research & Education Association. New Jersey. 2007.
ISBN 0-87891-270-3
6/13/2011
Optional Activities:
Civil War Debate
Trip to Tallahassee – State Government
Henry B. Plant Museum
CLEP - College Level Placement Exam U.S. History I and II
6/21/2010
The Paideia School
Mathematics 10
Algebra II
Biblical Principles
1. The mind and character of God are the foundation of mathematical truth as revealed in
creation: order, non-contradiction, immutability, infinitude, precision, beauty, and harmony.
2. God equips man with a rational mind to apprehend mathematical truth in creation.
3. Man’s finitude and sin nature preclude a comprehensive understanding of mathematical
intricacies of the created order.
4. God enables man to use mathematical knowledge to strive toward fulfillment of the dominion
mandate.
5. God’s command to count and measure reflects the truth that there is a righteous standard by
which He will judge men.
Mathematics Department Goals
1. Recognize the attributes of God that are revealed by a study of mathematics.
2. Know that man's sin nature and finitude hinder his complete understanding of math and
other intricacies of the created order.
3. Understand that human standards of measurement testify to the reality of God's perfect
knowledge and righteous standard.
4. Build on the foundation of the grammar years to further develop logical thinking patterns,
problem solving abilities, and elegant expression of the same.
5. Appreciate the role of mathematics in the historical development of other disciplines and
of culture.
6. Develop mathematical faculties to the fullest in order to use such tools in the service of
God and man.
Course Goals
Students will:
1. Recognize attributes of God, His perfect knowledge and righteous standard as reflected in
the study of advanced algebra.
2. Recognize the uses and limits of higher mathematics.
3. Learn the role of advanced algebra in the historical development of other disciplines.
4. Apply the tools of logic, previous knowledge of algebra and geometry, and new
knowledge of advanced algebra to practical projects.
5. Learn logarithmic, trigonometric, polynomial, and other special functions.
6. Learn the functionality of graphing calculators.
6/21/2010
Course Objectives
First Quarter
Functions
Describe and evaluate functions
Solve equations
Describe and evaluate sequences (explicit and recursive)
Variation and Graphs
Describe and solve variation problems (of type: direct, inverse, combined, and joint)
The Fundamental Theorem of Variation
Linear Functions
Solve and graph linear equations
Arithmetic sequences
Determine the slope or intercepts or equation of a line
Piecewise functions
Second Quarter
Systems
Inequalities and compound sentences
Solve systems of equations and systems of inequality
Graph linear inequalities
Quadratic Functions
The Binomial Square Theorem
Absolute Value-Square Root Theorem
Graph-Translation Theorem
Completing the Square
Solve quadratic equations
Complex numbers (imaginary numbers)
Third Quarter
Rational Exponents
Use Power Functions
Compute compound interest
Geometric sequences
Inverses and Radicals
Composite functions
Inverse of a function
nth
roots
Solve equations with radicals
Exponential and Logarithmic Functions
Exponential growth and decay
Common, natural, and other logarithms
Use logarithms to solve exponential equations
Fourth Quarter
Polynomials
Factor polynomials
6/21/2010
The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra, Factor Theorem, Ration-Zero Theorem,
Remainder Theorem, and Descartes’ Rule of Signs
Solve polynomial equations
Synthetic division
Conics
Parabolas, circles, ellipses, and hyperbolas
Series
Arithmetic and geometric series
Sigma notation
Probability and combinations
Factorial
The Binomial Theorem
Teacher Resources
Algebra II (Teacher’s Edition Parts I and II), University of Chicago School Mathematics Project
(UCSMP), New York: Scott, Foresman and Co., 1998. ISBN: 0-673-45961-6 and 0-673-45962-
4
CD-ROM resource file containing lesson masters, teaching aid masters,
assessment sourcebook and answer masters, solutions manual, and several other helps.
Automatic graphing calculator (TI-83+).
Student Resources
Algebra II, University of Chicago School Mathematics Project (UCSMP), New York: Scott,
Foresman and Co., 1998. ISBN: 0-673-45960-8
Automatic graphing calculator (TI-83+).
9/2/2010
The Paideia School
Science 10
Chemistry
Biblical Principles
1. God created all things out of nothing.
2. Creation reflects the glory of God’s attributes in its scientific characteristics, as
seen in its unity, diversity, order, complexity, beauty, consistency, and precision.
3. God sustains and redeems His fallen creation.
4. God commands and enables us to discover and utilize the intricacies of His
creation.
5. God’s creation includes marvels and mysteries that cannot be apprehended by
scientific means.
Science Department Goals
1. Gain a Biblical perspective on the scientific enterprise and examine various scientific
theories in light of Scriptural truth.
2. Attain an accurate knowledge of the contribution of Science to human life by teaching the
history of scientific research, development, and invention.
3. Provide laboratory experiences that emphasize scientific method and safety principles.
4. Develop problem-solving abilities that include gathering data, marshaling evidence, utilizing
discursive techniques, and interactive methods.
5. Blend inductive and deductive scientific teaching strategies to provide a realistic model of
scientific endeavor.
6. Train in the ethical use of scientific knowledge and technology for the glory of God.
Course Goals
Students will:
1. Understand the fundamental laws to which matter is subject.
2. Master vocabulary necessary to understand chemical concepts.
3. Develop skills in the area of scientific critique and debate.
4. Apply a combination of principles from chemistry and mathematics to lay the foundation for
a better understanding of the relationship between various types of matter.
5. Evaluate issues and their consequences as they relate to chemical processes and the
environment.
9/2/2010
Objectives
First Quarter
Introduction to Chemistry
What is chemistry?
Various philosophies of science employed in the past two centuries
The scientific method, as applied to chemistry; case histories
Data Analysis: Mathematical Aspects of Chemistry
Units of measurement
Scientific notation, significant figures, dimensional analysis
Reliability of measurements: accuracy and precision
Representing scientific data: graphing
Properties of Matter
Physical properties, chemical properties, states of matter
Physical changes, chemical changes, conservation of mass
Mixtures and solutions
Elements and compounds
The Structure of the Atom
History of the development of atomic theory
Subatomic particles and their properties
Sub nuclear particles and their properties
Structure and properties of atoms: how atoms differ from one another
Second Quarter
Electrons in Atoms
Wave nature of light and matter
Particle nature of light
Atomic emission spectra
Atomic theory: the Bohr model
Atomic theory: the quantum mechanical model of the atom
Atomic orbitals of electrons: names, shapes, and energy levels
Electron configurations of the elements
The Periodic Table
Historical development
Periodic law
Organization of the Periodic Table
Classification of the elements
Periodic trends of atomic properties
Chemistry of the Elements
Discussion of the chemistry of the more important individual elements, arranged
in their various groups
9/2/2010
Third Quarter
Ionic Bonding and Ionic Compounds
Ions and ionic bonds
Properties of ionic compounds
Names and formulas of ionic compounds
Metallic bonds and properties of metals
Covalent Bonding and Covalent Compounds
The concept of the covalent bond
Single and multiple covalent bonds; bond angles; hybridized electron orbitals
Strength of covalent bonds
Formulas and naming of molecular compounds
Shapes of covalently bonded molecules
Properties of covalent compounds
Types of Chemical Reactions
Writing and balancing chemical equations
Classification of chemical reactions
Reactions in aqueous solutions
Fourth Quarter
Solutions
Characteristics of solutions
Solvation in aqueous solutions, solubility
Concentration; molarity, molality, mole fraction, normality
Preparing solutions
Colligative properties
Heterogeneous mixtures (as opposed to solutions): suspensions, types of colloids
Acids and Bases
Properties of acids and bases
Arrhenius model, Bronsted-Lowry model, Lewis model
Monoprotic and polyprotic acids
Strengths of acids and bases, ionization constants
Ion product constant for water, pH
Neutralization reactions, titration
Salt hydrolysis
Buffered solutions
Stomach acids, antacids, ulcers
Oxidation-Reduction Reactions
Oxidation and reduction, electron transfer
Oxidizing and reducing agents
Oxidation and electronegativity
Oxidation numbers
Balancing oxidation-reduction equations
Half reactions; half reactions used in balancing redox reactions
9/2/2010
Teacher Resources
Chemistry, Matter, and Change: Teacher Edition: Glencoe. 2005. (ISBN 0-07-866419-5)
Ph.D. R. Thomas Myers, D.Sc Keith B. Oldham, Salvatore Tocci, and Holt Chemistry: Teacher
Edition: Holt Rinehart and Winston. 2007 (ISBN 0-03-039359-0)
Student Resources
Chemistry, Matter, and Change: Teacher Edition: Glencoe. 2005. (ISBN 0-02-828378-3)
10/10/2011
The Paideia School
Art 10
Biblical Principles
Department Goals
1. Reflect and enjoy the absolute values of the truth, goodness, and beauty of God in artistic
endeavors.
2. Appreciate human creative imagination and skill as gifts of God’s common grace.
3. Recognize the fine arts as valuable means of the cultural engagement required both in the
Dominion Mandate and the Great Commission.
4. Evaluate works of art through a Biblical perspective.
5. Achieve an appropriate balance of historical perspective, appreciation of master works, and
technical skill for each art form and medium studied.
6. Emphasize the grammar, dialectic, and rhetoric of the fine arts at appropriate grade levels.
Course Goals
Students will:
1. Strive to glorify God through the creation of a personal portfolio of their artwork. This
portfolio will include a still-life, a landscape, a human figure, an animal, and a self-
portrait, and will incorporate a variety of media including oils, acrylic, watercolor, ink,
and clay.
2. Examine, identify, and discuss masterworks, artists, and art movements, from the
Classical to the contemporary, learning to recognize beauty, goodness, and truth in these
artworks through a Christian worldview. 3. Serve Paideia community by taking photographs and creating page layouts for the school
yearbook and by designing and producing backdrops for our annual play.
1. God communicates His holiness, beauty, and majesty to man through the revelations of
moral goodness and aesthetic beauty as well as through propositional truth.
2. Man, made in the imago dei, is possessed of creative imagination and skill.
3. Through common grace, man is able to appreciate truth, goodness, and beauty, and he
expresses these through works of art.
4. Man’s perception of truth, goodness, and beauty has been perverted and distorted by
sin.
5. There are objective standards of beauty, as well as of truth and goodness.
6. Art reflects, interprets, and affects the world God has made; therefore, it must be
submitted to His standards as to motive, effect, worldview content, and technical
excellence.
10/10/2011
Quarterly Objectives:
First Quarter
Students begin portfolio work
Schaeffer series – video one (Roman Age) and seminar
Student-selected art seminar
Second Quarter
Students continue portfolio work
Schaeffer series – video two (The Middle Ages) and seminar
Student-selected art seminar
Third Quarter
Students continue portfolio work
Schaeffer series – video three (The Renaissance) and seminar
Student-selected art seminar
Play / set production
Fourth Quarter
Students continue portfolio work
Schaeffer series – video four (The Reformation) and seminar
Student-selected art seminar
Teacher Resources:
Francis Schaeffer’s “How Should We Then Live” video series and study guide.
ASIN: B000BS70P4
Activities:
Yearbook Staff - Design and Production
Design and production for Spring Play
The Paideia School
Upper School Music 10
Biblical Principles
1. God communicates His holiness, beauty, and majesty to man through the
revelations of moral goodness and aesthetic beauty as well as through
propositional truth.
2. Man, made in the imago dei, is possessed of creative imagination and skill.
3. Through common grace, man is able to appreciate truth, goodness, and beauty, and
he expresses these through works of art.
4. Man’s perception of truth, goodness, and beauty has been perverted and distorted
by sin.
5. There are objective standards of beauty, as well as of truth and goodness
6. Art reflects, interprets, and affects the world God has made; therefore, it must be
submitted to His standards as to motive, effect, worldview content, and technical
excellence.
Music Department Goals
1. Reflect and enjoy the absolute values of the truth, goodness, and beauty of God in artistic
endeavors.
2. Appreciate human creative imagination and skill as gifts of God’s common grace.
3. Recognize the fine arts as valuable means of the cultural engagement required both in the
Dominion Mandate and the Great Commission.
4. Evaluate works of art through a Biblical perspective.
5. Achieve an appropriate balance of historical perspective, appreciation of master works, and
technical skill for each art form and medium studied.
6. Emphasize the grammar, dialectic, and rhetoric of the fine arts at appropriate grade levels.
Course Goals
Students will:
1. Develop an appropriate view of choral music in the roles of worship, academia and music
history.
2. Develop breathing techniques that lead to the highest level of vocal production in the
choral environment.
3. Develop a vocal tone that is sonorous, energized, and free.
4. Develop and demonstrate proper vocal posture.
5. Develop and demonstrate a functional knowledge, understanding, and application of
basic diction principles and proper vowel production.
6. Learn and demonstrate the concept of ensemble that leads to proper choral blend,
intonation, and rhythmic vitality.
7. Demonstrate an appropriate understanding of music theory, history, and aural skills.
8. Develop and demonstrate an ability to follow basic conducting gestures and cues.
December 12, 2012